Kaylee Sawyer | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 24 July 2016 23) | (aged
Cause of death | Blunt force trauma |
Body discovered | 26 July 2016 |
The murder of Kaylee Sawyer, a 23-year-old woman from Bend, Oregon, occurred on July 24, 2016. Sawyer, a Central Oregon Community College student, was walking home when a man with a car, uniform, and equipment that resembled that of a police officer asked if she needed a ride home. The man, Edwin Lara, was actually a campus security guard and proceeded to abduct, sexually assault and murder Sawyer. Afterwards, Lara went on a two-day crime spree through Oregon and California.
Kaylee Anne Sawyer was born in Bend, Oregon to Jamie and Juli Sawyer. [1] At the time of her death, she was a dental assistant with Awbrey Dental and a student at Central Oregon Community College.
Sawyer disappeared in the early morning hours of July 24, 2016. [2] She had just returned from a bachelorette party when she got into an argument with her boyfriend, Camron Reimhofer, and left their shared apartment again to take a walk alone. Reimhofer attempted texting Sawyer minutes later, but she did not want to talk. Her last text to him was about her phone dying and saying goodbye. [3]
Sometime after, Sawyer ended up in the back of security officer Edwin Lara's car. He drove Sawyer to a remote parking lot on campus, where he raped and murdered her. [3]
Two days later, a woman's body matching Sawyer's description was found off Highway 126 near milepost 100 in the Dry Creek area of Redmond, Oregon. [4] Police later confirmed it was Sawyer. Her cause of death was ruled as blunt force trauma. [4]
The day after Sawyer's murder, Lara fled to Salem, Oregon where he carjacked and kidnapped a young woman at gun point. [5] Lara told his victim he was a police officer and showed her news reports about what he had done to Kaylee Sawyer. He then forced her to travel with him to California. Along the way, Lara decided to stop at a hotel in Cottage Grove, Oregon. Inside the hotel room, Lara handcuffed his victim, forced her to take sleeping pills, and made a series of physical advances leading her to believe he sexually assault her.
A short while later, growing concerned that law enforcement was nearing his location, Lara left the hotel with his victim and continued traveling toward California. At some point during the drive, Lara sought to change vehicles to avoid detection and stopped at two rest areas looking for another vehicle to steal. [5]
In the early morning hours on July 26, 2016, Lara stopped at a motel in Yreka, California where he spotted an elderly man near his vehicle. Lara parked, grabbed his kidnapping victim by the hand and approached the man. With his gun visible, Lara told the man that he needed his vehicle. When the man wouldn't comply, Lara shot him in the abdomen. At this point, Lara's victim pleaded with him to let her go, but he again grabbed her hand and forced her to flee with him by foot to a nearby gas station. [5]
At the gas station, Lara found his next victims, two young men and their elderly grandmother, sitting inside a vehicle. After threatening to shoot them, Lara entered their vehicle with his kidnapping victim and forced them to drive off. During the drive, Lara confessed to his victims that he had an "urge to kill" and had already murdered a young woman in Bend and shot a man in Yreka. Lara eventually dropped his three California victims on the side of the road, again threatened to kill them and continued driving southbound with his Oregon victim. Soon after, California law enforcement caught up with Lara and arrested him. [5]
In January 2018, after pleading guilty to the murder of Kaylee Sawyer, Lara was sentenced to life in prison. [6]
In April 2019, Lara received his second life sentence for kidnapping and carjacking after pleading guilty to the charges. [7]
In July 2020, Central Oregon Community College agreed to pay $2 million to Kaylee Sawyer's family. [8] Three years earlier, the family had filed a federal lawsuit against COCC arguing that the college failed to do an adequate background check on Lara and that they allowed their campus safety vehicles to closely resemble police patrol cars. Their reasoning was that Sawyer accepted a ride from Lara because she believed he was a police officer she could trust, which contributed to her death. [8]
On May 25, 2019, Oregon Governor Kate Brown signed into law Senate Bill 576, known as "Kaylee’s Law." [9] Under the law, campus security vehicles, uniforms and equipment cannot appear to be those of law enforcement. The vehicles cannot have roof-top lights or a push bumper in front. Vehicles cannot have a divider, known as a "cage," between the front and back seats. They must have GPS, an interior video camera or dispatch system that is recorded.